Logic List Mailing Archive

"Reasoning about other minds"

4-5 Aug 2014
Groningen, The Netherlands

CALL FOR PAPERS

WORKSHOP: Reasoning about other minds: Logical and cognitive perspectives
Groningen, the Netherlands, Monday 4 August and Tuesday morning 5
August,  2014

Workshop Goal:
This workshop aims to shed light on models of social reasoning that take
into account realistic resource bounds. People reason about other people?s
mental states in order to understand and predict the others? behavior. This
capability to reason about others? knowledge, beliefs and intentions is
often referred to as ?theory of mind?. Idealized rational agents are
capable of recursion in their social reasoning, and can reason about
phenomena like common knowledge. Such idealized social reasoning has been
modeled by modal logics such as epistemic logic and BDI (belief, goal,
intention) logics. However, in real-world situations, many people seem to
lose track of such recursive social reasoning after only a few levels.
Cognitive
scientists build computational models of social reasoning, for example,
recently an "inverse planning" model based on Bayesian inference frameworks
has proven successful in modeling human inferences about the goals and
beliefs underlying other people's observed behavior.

The workshop provides a forum for researchers that attempt to analyze,
understand and model how resource-bounded agents reason about other minds.
The workshop is a follow-up on the workshop that was collocated with TARK
2011 in Groningen, see http://www.ai.rug.nl/conf/reasoningminds/
(The website of the new workshop will appear shortly at
http://www.ai.rug.nl/conf/reasoningminds2/ )

Topics of interest include but are not limited to:

-Logics modeling human social cognition;
-Computational cognitive models of theory of mind;
-Epistemic game theory;
-Behavioral game theory;
-Relations between language and social cognition;
-Models of the evolution of theory of mind;
-Models of the development of theory of mind in children;
-Models of the neural implementation of social cognition;
-Bounded rationality in multi-agent systems;
-Formal models of team reasoning;
-Theory of mind in specific groups, e.g., persons with autism spectrum
disorder;
-Complexity measures for reasoning about other minds.

The Tuesday morning session is organized in cooperation with 'Advances in
Modal Logic' (see http://www.philos.rug.nl/AiML2014/) and will include an
invited lecture by Joe Halpern as well as contributed AiML presentations
that are relevant for 'Reasoning about other Minds'.

Invited Speakers for Monday, 4 August: to be announced

Deadline CFP: Please send your extended abstract in PDF format, not
exceeding 4 double-spaced pages (1,500 words) by Tuesday July 1, 2014. The
PDF files have to be uploaded online via the workshop's submission website
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=reasoningminds2014

The author notification date is Monday, July 28, 2014. Authors of accepted
abstracts will be expected to upload a full version of their paper after
the workshop, to be collected in an online workshop proceedings collection
that we are setting up. Further details about the proceedings will be made
available soon.

After the workshop, selected authors will be invited to submit a revised
and extended version of their paper for a special issue of a relevant
journal, to be decided.